Showing off: Tests of an hypothesis about men's foraging goals
References (68)
Hunting and Human Evolution
Journal of Human Evolution
(1982)- et al.
Foraging Decisions Among Ache Hunter-Gatherers: New Data and Implications for Optimal Foraging Models
Ethology and Sociobiology
(1987) Optimization models in context
Diet Choice, Risk, and Food Sharing in a Stochastic Environment
Journal of Anthropological Archaeology
(1986)Feeding Behavior of Chimpanzees in Gombe National Park, Tanzania
Feeding Behavior of Chimpanzees in Gombe National Park, Tanzania
- et al.
The Evolution of Cooperation
Science
(1981) Intra-sexual Selection in Drosophila
Heredity
(1948)- et al.
A Selfish Origin for Human Food Sharing: Tolerated Theft
Ethology and Sociobiology
(1984) - et al.
Tolerated Theft, Suggestions About the Ecology and Evolution of Sharing, Hoarding and Scrounging
Social Science Information
(1987)
A Note on the Sexual Division of Labor
American Anthropologist
The Evolution of Diversity in Avian Territorial Systems
Wilson bulletin
On Foraging Time Allocation in a Stochastic Environment
Ecology
Coping with Risk: Reciprocity among the Baswara of Northern Botswana
Man
The Theory of Peasant Economy
On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection
The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex
The Evolution of Political Society: an Essay in Political Anthropology
To Have and Have Not: The Ecology of Sharing among Hunter-Gatherers
Perspectives on the Theory of Social Evolution
How Much Food Do Foragers Need?
Why do Men Hunt? Some Benefits for Risky Strategies
Why Hunters Gather: Optimal Foraging and the Ache of Eastern Paraguay
American Ethnologist
Subsistence and Ecological Adaptations of modern Hunter-Gatherers
Adult Male Subsistence Strategies among Ache Hunter-Gatherers of Eastern Paraguay
Macronutrient Modifications of Optimal Foraging Theory: An Approach Using Indifference Curves Applied to Some Modern Foragers
Human Ecology
Seasonal Variance in the Diet of Ache Hunter-Gatherers in Eastern Paraguay
Human Ecology
Tradeoffs in male and female reproductive strategies among the Ache: Part 1
Tradeoffs in male and female reproductive strategies among the Ache: Part 2
Women's Subsistence Strategies among Ache Hunter-Gatherers of Eastern Paraguay
Female Subsistence Strategies Among Ache Hunter-Gatherers of Eastern Paraguay
Human Ecology
The Food Sharing Behavior of Early Hominids
Scientific American
The Archaeology of Human Origins: Studies of the Lower Pleistocene in East Africa 1971–1981
Advances in World Archaeology
Cited by (392)
A cost for signaling: do Hadza hunter-gatherers forgo calories to show-off in an experimental context?
2023, Evolution and Human BehaviorWhat does prey harvest composition signal to a social audience?: Experimental studies with Aché hunter-gatherers of Paraguay
2023, Evolution and Human BehaviorCitation Excerpt :It is well established that good hunters are usually preferred as mates and social partners (Alvard & Gillespie, 2004; Gurven, Kaplan, & Gutierrez, 2006; Kaplan & Hill, 1985; Marlowe, 2004; Patton, 2005; Smith, 2004), and usually show higher reproductive success (but see Kraft, Venkataraman, Tacey, Dominy, & Endicott, 2019). It is an open question, however, whether hunting and associated high levels of meat-sharing are better characterized as a strategy of provisioning and parenting effort or as a signal designed to impress potential mates and social allies (Gurven & Hill, 2009; Hawkes, 1991; Hawkes & Bird, 2002; Patton, 2005; Stibbard-Hawkes, 2019; Stibbard-Hawkes, Smith, & Apicella, 2022; Trumble, Smith, O'Connor, Kaplan, & Gurven, 2014; Wood & Marlowe, 2014). Hunting success requires both skill and luck, and results in high daily harvest variability, making it difficult to evaluate the relative abilities of individual hunters (Gurven et al., 2006; Hill & Kintigh, 2009; Stibbard-Hawkes, Attenborough, & Marlowe, 2018).
Associations between men's reputations for fathering and their reproductive success among BaYaka foragers in the Congo Basin
2023, Evolution and Human BehaviorUnderstanding the future meat consumers
2022, Meat Science